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RESEARCH ARTICLE

Retention capacity of biochar-amended New Zealand dairy farm soil for an estrogenic steroid hormone and its primary metabolite

Ajit K. Sarmah A G , Prakash Srinivasan A B , Ronald J. Smernik C , Merilyn Manley-Harris B , Michael Jerry Antal Jr D , Adriana Downie E and Lukas van Zwieten F
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Soil Chemical & Biological Interactions, Landcare Research, Private Bag 3127, Hamilton, New Zealand.

B Chemistry Department, University of Waikato, Private Bag 3105, Hamilton, New Zealand.

C Soil and Land Systems, School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide 5005, Australia.

D Hawaii Natural Energy Institute, University of Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu, HI 96822, USA.

E Pacific Pyrolysis, 56 Gindurra Road, Somersby, NSW 2250, Australia.

F NSW Industry and Investment, 1243 Bruxner Highway, Wollongbar, NSW 2477, Australia.

G Corresponding author. Email: sarmahA@LandcareResearch.co.nz

Australian Journal of Soil Research 48(7) 648-658 https://doi.org/10.1071/SR10013
Submitted: 5 January 2010  Accepted: 13 May 2010   Published: 28 September 2010

Abstract

We examined the retention ability of a New Zealand dairy farm soil amended with 3 types of biochar produced from a variety of feedstocks for a steroid hormone (oestradiol, E2) and its primary transformation product (estrone, E1). Biochars produced from corn cob (CC), pine sawdust (PSD) and green waste (GW) were characterised by scanning electron microscopy, Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, and solid-state 13C nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Batch sorption studies were performed on soil amended with each biochar (0.5% and 1% by weight) using a complex solvent extraction scheme, and isotherms were fitted to the Freundlich model.

All isotherms were highly non-linear, with N values in the range 0.46–0.83 (E2) and 0.66–0.88 (E1) in soil amended with different percentages of biochars. Overall, addition of all 3 biochars was found to increase the soil sorption affinity for the hormones, with E2 sorption being the highest in the soil amended with 1% PSD biochar. There was no marked difference in hormone sorption ability in the other 2 treatments (soil treated with 1% CC biochar and 1% GW biochar). Overall, the effective distribution coefficient (Kdeff) values for E2 at the lowest equilibrium concentration (Cw 0.5 mg/L) ranged from 35 to 311 L/kg in soil amended with the 3 types of biochar. Addition of 0.5% of PSD biochar resulted in ~560% increase in the Kdeff value for E2, while at 1% addition of PSD biochar, uptake of E2 was nearly 1400% higher than the control. For E1, the percentage increase in Kdeff was comparatively smaller than E2; however, it still ranged from 40 to 280%, and 60 to >320% at addition of 0.5% and 1% PSD biochar, respectively, compared with the control soil. Highest treatment temperature and associated greater surface area, low ash content, higher carbon content, and the abundance of polar functional groups (e.g. –OH, C=O) may explain why the soil amended with PSD biochar exhibited high sorptive capacity for the hormones.

Additional keywords: effective distribution coefficient, estradiol, estrone, FTIR, NMR spectroscopy, SEM.


Acknowledgments

AKS thanks Doug Stewart of Lakeland Steel Products Limited, Rotorua, NZ, for providing pine sawdust biochar sample. Michael Mucalo and Alan Langdon (Chemistry Department, Waikato University) are thanked for access and support to FTIR and XRD analysis. The support of Helen Turner (School of Science and Engineering, Waikato University) for SEM work is appreciated. The work was funded by the Foundation for Research, Science and Technology of New Zealand (Contract No. CO9X0705).


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